if you want to browse to the folder where the temp files are located, they are stored in: C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Temporary Internet Files

You can click on tools on the menu of IE and on the general tab is a section called browsing history. Click on the settings button and you will see options for dealing with the files as well as the path to the files.

if you want to browse to the folder where the temp files are located, they are stored in: C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Temporary Internet Files

You can click on tools on the menu of IE and on the general tab is a section called browsing history. Click on the settings button and you will see options for dealing with the files as well as the path to the files.

It allows you to export the visited sites to a text file or to a file that hyperlinks every site so you don't have to go through and try to keep up with every site they've been to. Where it lists the location of the history files, you can do "\\machine001\c$\Users\jadoe\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Temporary Internet Files" and access the history of remote machines without ever leaving your desktop or having to remote into them.

A few months ago, I was asked by a team manager to audit one of his employee's internet activity. Since we don't use a proxy or other web service, I had to think reactively. I ended up using the above mentioned program and now it is my go-to tool. It is a very well designed little thing that gathers all the data requested(as long as it hasn't been deleted) without any grumbling or moaning. It just does it.

﻿In our browser once we download files from any site or browse any site, the next time when we open it will open from cookie cache / from the system. Now, i want to know how we come to know that the javascript which is re-opened from the system is from downloaded data or from the history.

If you look in your temporary internet cache(for IE) assuming you don't clear your cache, you will see many .js files. I don't know for sure if they are being download fresh on a site re-visit, but if they are in the cache, I would imagine they are being invoked, unless there is some code on the site that refreshes the javascript based on timestamp, etc.

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